Xylem transports water and minerals up the stem of the plant for maintenance. Phloem is bidirectional and transports the glucose derived from photosynthesis.
In botany, vascular tissues include xylem and phloem. Xylem is the type of vascular tissue that moves water and dissolved nutrients from the roots to the leaves. The xylem are one-way roads, however. No particles can move down the tree through the xylem. Phloem are the tubes in plants responsible for transporting sugars from the leaves to the roots and vice-versa. These are the tubes that are like normal roads. The sugars in the phloem are able go from the roots to the leaves and from the leaves to the roots. In subjects other than botany, I have no idea what vascular tissue is used for. Hopefully the information I gave you is what you needed.
Vascular tissue in plants can best be compared to blood vessels in people and animals.
The stem carries water from the roots to the rest of the plant. It has three parts, xylem, phloem, and cambium. The xylem carries sugars up, the phloem can go either way, and cambium is where sugars are made. Hope this helps! :D
there is a muscular tissue there that opens and closes to protect it.
Water enters the root cells by osmosis and enters into the xylem. The pressure of water entering the xylem creates osmotic pressure, pushing the column of water up through the stem. Water evaporating on the surface of the leaf cells pulls on other molecules and pulls the column of water up the plant and into the leaves.
In botany, vascular tissues include xylem and phloem. Xylem is the type of vascular tissue that moves water and dissolved nutrients from the roots to the leaves. The xylem are one-way roads, however. No particles can move down the tree through the xylem. Phloem are the tubes in plants responsible for transporting sugars from the leaves to the roots and vice-versa. These are the tubes that are like normal roads. The sugars in the phloem are able go from the roots to the leaves and from the leaves to the roots. In subjects other than botany, I have no idea what vascular tissue is used for. Hopefully the information I gave you is what you needed.
It is drawn into the trunk of the tree and pulled up through xylem, one of the two types of transport tissue in trees.
Vascular tissue in plants can best be compared to blood vessels in people and animals.
You need new tissue in place of the scarred tissue. That's the only way.
xylem and phluem
The stem carries water from the roots to the rest of the plant. It has three parts, xylem, phloem, and cambium. The xylem carries sugars up, the phloem can go either way, and cambium is where sugars are made. Hope this helps! :D
Phloem has a two-way flow
Xylem are just made up from cell walls left from cells, making hollow tubes. The walls of these tubes are hydrophilic, so water attaches readily to them, helping it to climb on its way up the plant.
According to research and data, water transports into a celery stick by moving through it's veins and going up to the leaves. Imporoved answer: the celery absorbs the water through the xylem tubes, this tubes carry the water all the way up to the leaves.
there is a muscular tissue there that opens and closes to protect it.
Up, down and all around is the way in which the circulation of an oak tree (Quercus spp) works.Specifically, all circulation is associated with the phloem and the xylem. The phloem is the treewide channel by which processed nutrients and photosynthetic products go flowing downward. The xylem is the treewide channel by which dissolved nutrients from the roots go upward, against gravity and because of capillary action.
Xylem is deeper inside the plant (near the trunk) and transports water up to the leaves. Phloem is near the outside and transports sugar and other materials all throughout the plant.Xylem has a one way flow, while phloem can go either directions.Xylem Is in the roots. Go Apex Kids -Emily